Friday, October 9, 2009

Jamie Moyer is in Thomas Jefferson University hospital with a blood infection, according to Phillies general manager Ruben Amaro Jr.

Moyer had surgery last Friday to repair three torn tendons in his groin and lower abdomen.

“He is doing fine,” Amaro said. “He has Some type of blood infection and will likely stay one more night. Getting the fever down and taking antibiotics. Not sure how he got it."

No further information is immediately available.

Posted by Andy Martino @ 5:52 PM  Permalink | 25 comments
Thursday, October 8, 2009

J.A. Happ walked into his manager’s office after today's game and insisted he could pitch Saturday, despite the line drive that bruised his leg in the seventh inning.           

“I’m OK,” he told Charlie Manuel. 
           
“We’ll talk about it (Friday),” Manuel said.  
           
Tomorrow, Manuel will finally have to name a starting pitcher for Game 3 of the National League division series, which is tied at one game apiece after Colorado defeated the Phillies 5-4 today at Citizens Bank Park. His choices are Happ, Joe Blanton and Pedro Martinez, and he said he was leaning toward the latter two.
           
The situation was complicated even before the game, with Happ and Blanton available in the bullpen and both hoping to pitch Saturday. It grew still more muddled later, when both pitched in relief, and Happ was injured.
           
He was diagnosed with a bruise in his lower left leg. X-rays were negative. 
           
“It was just one of those things where right after it happens, you don’t have strength in it,” he said. “If I had (another) four or five minutes, it would not have been an issue.”
           
Happ said he could pitch Saturday, as a starter or reliever. “I feel like I would he ready,” he said.
           
In his postgame press conference, Manuel mentioned only Blanton and Martinez as possibilities to start Game 3--but that was before the brief meeting in which Happ made his case. 
           
“Right now, I would say it is between Blanton and Pedro,” Manuel said. 
           
Both Martinez and Blanton said they would be ready despite the severe weather expected in Denver. Forecasts call for temperatures in the low-30s, with a 40 percent chance of snow on Saturday.
           
“Yes, I do expect to get the ball in Game 3 but you have to ask Charlie,” Martinez said. “It is up to him.”
           
Martinez acknowledged that the weather would create unfamiliar conditions. “I’ll be a rookie out there,” he said. “Even though I think I have played in 30 degree weather, it hasn’t snowed. In Boston and Cleveland and New York, it has gotten cold, so I’m looking forward to doing what I can.”
           
Blanton threw 19 pitches, fewer than he would in a typical side session between starts. “A few less pitches, but a little more intensity,” he said. “I don’t see it being a problem one way or another….I recover quick and I can do whatever.”
           
Blanton said that the cold would not bother him. “It’s going to be cold,” he said. “If you let it bother you, it will. If you don’t, it won’t.”
           
Manuel insisted that Blanton would be ready to start, despite the relief appearance. “I’ve been around the game 47 years. Yeah, I think he can do it, yes. Yes I do. I’ve seen guys come back and pitch three or four days in a row that were starters. How about that? Yeah, I’ve seen them do it.”
Posted by Andy Martino @ 11:01 PM  Permalink | 20 comments
Thursday, October 8, 2009

Cole Hamels did not enjoy a strong postseason start this afternoon, allowing four runs in five innings, but that was hardly the most important event in his life today. Hamels’ wife, Heidi, went into labor during the game. 

The Inquirer reported in June that Hamels and his wife were expecting a son, their first child. They also intend to adopt a child from Ethiopia next year.
 
"We still plan on adopting," Hamels said in June. The pregnancy "is something we were planning on doing anyway. We're going to adopt a girl, and it will be great for her to grow up with a brother. They'll be like twins."
Posted by Andy Martino @ 5:09 PM  Permalink | 23 comments
Thursday, October 8, 2009

Update: In thinking about Charlie Manuel's comments, detailed below about the need for a strong utiltity infielder, two names occured to me: Mark DeRosa and Marco Scutaro. Both are free agents, and both are the type of veteran that Manuel would be likely to trust.  DeRosa could also spell Raul Ibanez in left field.  The Phils will be operating with payroll constrains, and neither of these guys figures to be very expensive.

Just sayin.

***

Good morning, and welcome to episode two of TBS’ new reality series “The NLDS.” Some lineup changes in a very big game for the Rockies, who’d be pretty dead looking if the went down down two games to none.  

Carlos Gonzalez is leading off, with Dexter Fowler batting second. Ryan Spilborghs is batting seventh and playing right field. Spilborghs is 2 for 3 with two doubles lifetime against Cole Hamels.
 
***
An interesting moment in Charlie Manuel’s pregame presser came when he was asked about Chase Utley. Utley was obviously tired in September, as he is every season. Manuel said that the way to avoid that was to acquire an better backup infielder. Um, sorry Eric Bruntlett, but that doesn’t sound good for you.
 
Here’s the quote from Bill Faulkner:
 
“I would like to have somebody who can—somebody that can give Jimmy Rollins and Chase Utley a spell, and it would probably be real hard to find, because I expect him to be close to—we don’t want to lose nothing by playing a guy, if that makes sense. I want something similar to who they are and someone that can probably contribute something similar to that. Though that would be hard to find, because that’s a tough job.”
 
Are you listening, Ruben?
 
***
Manuel is being cagey about his rotation. He said yesterday that Pedro Martinez would be available in the bullpen today, and now he says Pedro probably won’t pitch today. My guess is, if Happ and Blanton do not pitch today, they will start Games 3 and 4, who knows in what order. Manuel is playing this very close to the vest.
 
“He does his side work, and he throws in the bullpen,” Manuel said of Pedro. “He’s ready. He knows what he’s doing…I’d say he is capable of going out there and throwing definitely 90 to 100 pitches.”
 
Okay, will Blanton and Happ be able to stay ready for a start, given the changed routine? 
 
“They are going to be ready. They’ll know. They’ll be ready.”
 
All righty.
 
 
Posted by Andy Martino @ 12:14 PM  Permalink | 32 comments
Wednesday, October 7, 2009

Good morning from the Windy City. A few interesting bits from this morning’s episode of “Quality time with Charlie and Colbert:” 

--Manuel said it was a tough decision to leave Eric Bruntlett off the roster in favor of Miguel Cairo, but it came down to which of the two was more game ready.
 
“Bruntlett, the fact that he was on the team all year long, and the work he put in, and the part he played on our team, that was tough. That was a tough decision. But in the end, I felt like Cairo went to the minor leagues, he had playing time, and he was sharper. He was swinging the bat better, and I felt like he was in a position probably to help us more because of it.”
 
--Manuel said that Pedro Martinez will not be physically in the bullpen today, as will J.A. Happ and Joe Blanton, but he could pitch in relief if needed.
 
--Antonio Bastardo will likely be used against lefties in the middle innings, and ScottEyre and Happ in the late innings. Manuel was fuzzy on whether Eyre (elbow) can pitch on consecutive days.
 
--Manuel on the wind: “You won’t believe this, but I got up this morning and got outside of my house, and a limb blew down about 30 feet from my house. And it was a good sized limb, too. I thought, the wind is going to be blowing today.,,,if the wind is blowing out, its’ definitely going to affect the hitters.”
 
--Hamels was not critical or in any way outwardly unhappy about not getting the Game 1 assignment, but he offered blunt criticism about the two days games this week.
 
“In being the defending champs, I think it’s kind of a little weird that we get both games at 2 o’clock. I don’t think it’s fair. I definitely don’t think it’s fair to the fans, because this is all about the home-field advantage…I understand TV ratings, but I think at the end of the day, most players would rather play when they’re comfortable. That’s kind of what we’re trained at, either 1:00 or 7:00, and I think that’s more fair to us than really the TV ratings. I don’t think we (care) as much for TV ratings.”
 
 
Enjoy Game 1. 
Posted by Andy Martino @ 11:38 AM  Permalink | 13 comments
Tuesday, October 6, 2009

UPDATE: Here is the official NLDS roster

Catchers (2): Paul Bako and Carlos Ruiz
 
Infielders (6): Miguel Cairo, Greg Dobbs, Pedro Feliz, Ryan Howard, Jimmy Rollins and Chase Utley
Outfielders (5): Ben Francisco, Raul Ibanez, Matt Stairs, Shane Victorino and Jayson Werth
 
Pitchers (12): left-handers Antonio Bastardo, Scott Eyre, Cole Hamels, J.A. Happ and Cliff Lee and right-handers Joe Blanton, Chad Durbin, Kyle Kendrick, Brad Lidge, Ryan Madson, Pedro Martinez and Brett Myers
 
Phillies manager Charlie Manuel named former Cy Young award winner Cliff Lee as his Game One starter against the Colorado Rockies in Wednesday's Game One of the National League division series. He will face 25-year-old  righthander  Ubaldo Jimenez (15-12, 3.47 ERA).

Lee is 7-4 with a 3.39 ERA with the Phillies after coming over from Cleveland in a July trade.

Lefthander Cole Hamels will start Game Two on Thursday. He finished 10-11 with a 4.32 ERA. Last year's National League Championship Series and World Series MVP has struggled at times, but seems to have regained much of his confidence. "I understand now what a difference I can make, the tone I can set when I win a postseason game," Hamels said Sunday.

Last year, Lee went  22-3 with a 2.54 ERA and won the American League Cy Young Award.

“I’m just going to try to do what I’ve done my whole career,” he said earlier this week.

 Quick analysis: This is a risky move, given Lee's Sept. performace.  Hamels would only be starting on short rest because the Phils sent him out there on Saturday.  A better pitcher in Sept. than Lee, Hamels also has impressive postseason experience.

Lee pitched very well against Colorado in August, but that was before his innings total climbed to career-high levels, appearing to undermine his performance.

As for the bullpen, Manuel does not know, or would not say, who his closer would be in the first save opportunity.  Joe Blanton and J.A. Happ will be in the bullpen for the first two games, an indication of how Manuel feels about his relief corps.  Both are candidates to start Game 3 and Game 4.

Posted by Andy Martino @ 12:37 PM  Permalink | 103 comments
Monday, October 5, 2009

You feelin’ it yet? That playoff buzz? How do I know if it’s working? 

There are so many reasons why this is a fun time of year, especially if you follow a championship-caliber team.  All the questions surrounding the Phillies since spring training have involved their chances of repeating, and now they will finally have the chance to try.   Playoff baseball, especially during the division series, feels almost like college football—one loss, one play even, can determine a team’s entire year.

The Phillies drew a favorable matchup with Colorado, despite the Rockies strong play to finish the season.  Colorado simply does not hit lefthanded pitching, a good thing for a team with lefties Hamels, Lee and (maybe) Happ in the rotation.  It would be a better thing for the Phillies if J.C. Romero were around, but he ain’t.

The Phillies, of course, have a lot of pretty good lefty hitters, and Colorado’s best lefty starter, Jorge De La Rosa, came up with a groin injury Saturday.  His status for the series is undetermined, and that would be a huge loss for the Rox. Ryan Howard, one of the only Phillies who remembered how to use his bat on a regular basis in September, is a career .226 hitter against LHP; .303 versus RHP.

Now for the roster and rotation.  The Phils do not have to announce anything until 10am Wednesday, but will probably notify us of their decisions today or tomorrow.  Charlie Manuel said yesterday he was thinking about going with 11 pitchers to make room for the hot-hitting and experienced Miguel Cairo.  The position players would be:

--Cairo, Howard, Chase Utley, Jimmy Rollins, Pedro Feliz, Eric Bruntlett, Carlos Ruiz, Paul Bako, Raul Ibanez, Shane Victorino, Jayson Werth, Matt Stairs.

In writing a piece for Wednesday’s paper about the bench, I realized that it ain’t as bad as you think—but it could be better.  Dobbs is hurt, says he won’t be better until the offseason.  Jason Giambi and Jim Thome were available this summer as lefty pinch hitters, and the Phils front office did not believe that they needed to upgrade that position.  It’s hard to dump Stairs, because of his on-base skills and power potential, but why not bring in a guy like Giambi and allow Dobbs to heal for next year?

I know, I know, Dobbs plays third base.  But so does Miguel Cairo.  There was more than one way to put this thing together, is all I’m sayin.

Ben Francisco represents the brighter side of things on the bench.  A talented hitter and smart acquisition, Francisco allows Charlie Manuel to DH Raul Ibanez in a potential World Series.

***
And what about the pitching?  I was on Comcast’s playoff preview show with Mitch Williams last night, and he surprised me with his certainty that Cliff Lee would start Game 1.  I think it will be, and should be, Cole Hamels.

Mitch’s point was that Hamels threw 47 pitches on Saturday, and would never go on three days rest.  That’s true, he wouldn’t.  But 47 pitches is a side session, not a game, and Hamels was a better pitcher in September than Lee.  Frankly, Lee looks gassed after throwing more innings this season than he has in his life.  Joe Blanton, after a workhorse year, is also a concern in the rotation.

Manuel likes to go with guys he has seen succeed in a given situation.  And Hamels has done well as a postseason ace.  Apologies to Wild Thing, I still believe it will be Hamels on Wednesday. Could it be Lee? Sure.

Then comes the mystery of J.A. Happ’s role.  Yes, they need a lefty in the bullpen.  But should it be your most consistent starter? I believe that Phils brass decided about a week ago to move Happ to the playoff pen, and are now reconsidering.  Let’s put it this way: Based on reporting and hunches, I won’t be shocked if Happ is a reliever this week, and I’ll be only mildly shocked if he starts Game 4 or even earlier.  A lot of options are being considered with regards to Happ.

As far as the bullpen goes, I do not believe Sergio Escalona and Antonio Bastardo will make the team—unless Happ is in the rotation. Manuel basically said yesterday that the two young lefties are not ready, but still might be there because the team’s thin bullpen.

So we are left to consider Clay Condrey, Chad Durbin, Scott Eyre, Kyle Kendrick, Brad Lidge, Ryan Madson, Brett Myers, Tyler Walker, Happ and Pedro Martinez as possibilities for the bullpen (Martinez could also start a Game 4, but the opponent makes that less likely).

Durbin may have used a strong Sept. to win a spot.  Condrey, Walker, Kendrick and Myers are all bubble guys.  I would personally leave Myers off, because he is the biggest health question and has not been able to solve the closer problems.  To me, Walker, Durbin and Condrey are all more valuable at this moment, because of health.

***
And what about the ninth inning?  The following may cause you to experience a sudden aneurysm or stroke, but if Hamels or Lee leaves after seven with a lead Wednesday, I’ll bet Manuel goes with Madson-to-Lidge.  Lidge will have the shortest of leashes, but he’s you Game 1 closer.  If that doesn’t go well, it’s closer-by-committee.

Yes, there are issues.  Who knows how far this thing goes? But whether it ends this weekend or in November, let’s enjoy the intensity.

Keep checking in for updates.
 

Posted by Andy Martino @ 10:25 AM  Permalink | 50 comments
Sunday, October 4, 2009
Colorado Rockies' Ubaldo Jimenez. (AP Photo/Gus Ruelas)

Colorado Rockies manager Jim Tracy said minutes ago there was a "good chance" that Ubaldo Jimenez will be their Game 1 starter against the Phillies in the NLDS, our Jim Salisbury reports from Los Angeles. 

Jimenez is 15-12 with a 3.47 earned run average, and has not faced the Phillies this season.
 
Tracy also said that that status of starter Jorge De La Rosa, who suffered a groin injury last night, was still undetermined. 
 
The Phils have yet to name their Wednesday starter, but the Phillies Zone’s educated guess is that it will be Cole Hamels. 
 
As far as J.A. Happ, the guess is that he will be available in the bullpen for games 1 and 2, and if he is not burned there, would start a potential game 4. Just speculation at this point, though, based on reporting. What would your playoff rotation look like, and how would you use Happ?
Posted by Andy Martino @ 3:02 PM  Permalink | 13 comments
Wednesday, September 30, 2009

Well, I can’t leave the press box before giving you a little color and some information on a bog night for the Phillies, though I won’t be long. The 24-ounce beer shower I just endured courtesy of a Mr. Jayson Werth has my teeth chattering; after spending 10 soaked, frigid minutes on the field, I’ll likely be dead by the playoffs. Thanks, Jayson. 

Anyways, first the scenic stuff. It was a lot of spraying and jumping and whooping, but the emotions were real—men enjoying a true accomplishment. More in tomorrow’s game story, but here’s a sample of what they said:
 
Brad Lidge, while friend Chad Durbin snuck up behind to pour a cold bottle of champagne on the closer’s head: “It’s really weird right now. For some reason, it feels like the whole year has been going well, even though it hasn’t.”
 
Jimmy Rollins: “It has been rougher this year. Just the fact that everyone was gunning for us. We stood up to the test in the regular season, and we’ll stand up to the test in the postseason.”
 
The aforementioned Jayson “Thanks for smudging my entire notebook” Werth, cigar hanging from his mouth and goggles covering his eyes, walked toward the home dugout. Fans responded with a roar, and one tossed Werth an oversized boxing glove with a Phillies insignia on it; Werth slipped his hand in the glove and raised it in the air.
 
“I want to say you get used to this, but every one is different and special,” when I told him he owed me a damn good quote after giving me pneumonia. “We are going to enjoy this moment, but know where we still have to go.”
 
 
Lidge, for one, believes that he will yet experience success this season. “We’re about to get on a roll,” he said. “I’m about to do what I do best.”
 
His fellow relievers, who form a close and supportive group, gathered in the bullpen for a toast. 
 
Charlie Manuel, the man who sent Lidge to the mound for his reassuring moment, was absent during the celebration. Standing in front of the desk in his office while younger men jumped and yelled and hugged in the other room, Manuel said quietly:
 
“This celebration is for them. They are the ones who got it done….I’ll celebrate when we win the big one.”
 
 
***
Many Phillies poured champagne on the sign in left field honored Harry Kalas, the broadcaster who died of a heart attack in the broadcast booth at Washington, DC’s Nationals Park on April 15.
 
And some information related to the playoffs came out amid the bubbly. Ruben Amaro Jr. was impressed by Kyle Kendrick tonight and did not rule him out as a member of the postseason roster. The GM also said for the first time that Pedro Martinez-obviously less impressive this week than J.A. Happ, might not start in the playoffs---though nothing had been decided.
 
And that’s it for now. 
Posted by Andy Martino @ 11:38 PM  Permalink | 18 comments
Wednesday, September 30, 2009

There is a playoff feel at the Bank tonight, with crisp weather, a thick crowd of reporters and rolled-up plastic lining the walls in the Phillies clubhouse. A Phils win or Braves loss would clinch the NL East tonight, of course, and the team trying to sew it up got a piece of good news: Brett Myers is available to pitch tonight, according to pitching coach Rich Dubee. 

Myers, who strained an upper back muscle and has not pitched since Sept. 12, threw a successful bullpen session Monday. Yesterday, manager Charlie Manuel and Dubee either did not know or would not saw if the righthander would need another bullpen before rejoining the team.  The team had been saying all along that they did not expect Myers to pitch until later in the week.
 
A few minutes ago, Dubee confirmed that Myers would, in fact, be in the pen tonight and ready to see game action.
Posted by Andy Martino @ 4:16 PM  Permalink | 9 comments
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About Andy Martino
Andy Martino is in his first season on the Phillies beat. A former New York City public school teacher and graduate of the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism, he previously wrote for the New York Daily News, where he covered baseball and worked with the award-winning investigative sports "I-team."
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